Awesome :-). If I remember right Murray did a commercial also shown before Wimby with him and a tennis ball around London, that was cool also. I have to say that last serve looks like he actually did it……Although I would not be the fool to stand there in front of a 100+ mph serve just 30-40 ft away?

Yeah the first shot is hard to see but the second one is pretty clear. That’s impressive. Let’s not forget aiming at a can like that really isn’t as hard as aiming at a penny on the opposite side of a net.

To the people who say it fake and if it was real he would have 100% serve percentage. Fed did not stike the ball with a lot of force, thats the reason for the accuracy. In matches he hits the ball with a level of force that causes faults to happen. Think about throwing a ball at a target with minimal force, your accuracy would be high, but wind up like a big league pitcher and see what happens, its common sense really. PS Dementieva did something like this during 2009 us open (i think) where she placed water bottles on the four corners on the service box and picked them off on her first try, again, it was real and not at full force. dummies!!!

I’llbgo with rffan on this one, that little speech before makes little sense and does not pertain to the situation, therefor, it is certainly REAL fed!
I don’t doubt that he hit those shots but I do kinda think it was one of those on purpose outtakes!

This incident shows that people believe what they want to believe – regardless of contradicting evidence.

If Roger frequently (about 30- to 40-percent of the time) misses while aiming toward a service box that is 21 feet long by 13.5 feet wide, then surely he can miss while aiming toward a target that is a mere five-inches away from possibly permanently damaging a person`s eye.

And to take such a risk while in a suit, with a noisy audience around that could interrupt his service motionÉ (that`s supposed to be question mark at end).

Until proven otherwise, this is an entertaining – yet staged – spectacle.

Obviously not too many here play real tennis. I could almost do the same thing while playing in college. Just take your serve speed down a couple of notches and take out the spin and most advanced players are very accurate, especially at a shorter distance like this. I definitely wouldn’t have the confidence to try knocking something off a guys head though…guess that’s why Feds a pro… But really, to doubt this just shows you don’t know tennis very well.

(and to those who point out that he faults…he faults when he is trying to hit a kick serve at 130 mph, not when he is attempting a trick shot at 20 feet.)

Just to chime in. Agree with many others here that it is probably real based on: A) Fed clearly did not serve it with full force, B) he was maybe 20 feet from the target C) the angle and camera can easily make the serve appear to be much faster than it was.

Then again maybe it was just a clever trick, but pretty cool either way.

If it were true, it is enough amazing that must be a real slowmotion caption to show that it is no fake.
The matter that there is no slowmotion, confirm is a fake.
Im sure that with no a man under the bottle and with few tryes, he can do it twice consecutively, but not with a man behind.
someone tells a story about Tiger Woods where he practice throwing the golf ball so near his father head.

I’M still thinking about this video! Madmax, I TOTALLY thought you’re link was gonna be fed “confirming the video as real or fake” I was prepared for REAL! HA!
Murray’s tricks are less debatable. Not real. Maybe the plates. And the drain pipe. Dangit now I have to go watch this vis again! I am an ad man’s dream. I play with head racket and ill start using men’s shavers!

lol @ those who genuinely think this is real. While it’s sure feasible for him, do you have any fucking idea how much it’ll cost him if he hits the guy ?

at this level of profesionalism, insurances tell you what you’re allowed to do…and what you’re not allowed. this is typically something absolutely no one at this level will take the risk to do, whatever “small” the risk is…